Tag: print

  • The City Works

    The City Works

    Founded in 2015 by Sylvia Moritz and Rowan Ottesen, The City Works is an urban-themed brand of stationery, gifts and souvenirs. Paying incredible attention to detail, Sylvia and Rowan create meticulous illustrations that tell the stories behind the cities they use for inspiration, providing unique designs in which you can get lost for hours.

    We spoke to Rowan about the beginnings of The City Works, their design process and future plans.

    www.the-city-works.com

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    What made you start The City Works? Could you tell us a little bit about your backgrounds?

    Both myself and Sylvia Moritz studied design at Camberwell College of Arts. After graduating, we worked in a few design agencies while Sylvia grew a career in printmaking, featuring complex cityscapes.

    We founded The City Works together with the simple principal to draw the world. We wanted to combine the unique intricacy of Sylvia’s ‘citysphere’ prints with our love for travel and our obsession with paper, to make more affordable merchandise that anyone who loves cities could enjoy.

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    Why did you decide to focus on an urban theme for all your products?

    Cities are obviously fascinating places, that grow and evolve over time. They’re immensely diverse and complicated, populated by millions of people who each have their own story and reason for being where they are.

    We think there is a charming complexity to cities, and it’s frustrating for many souvenirs to focus on the typical skyline of famous landmarks. No city is complete without it’s people. When observed from afar, every city is a beautiful, unique living fabric.

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    Your illustrations are full of intricate details. Please tell us about the inspiration behind them and the process you follow to create them.

    Of course the intricacy lies in the fact that, no matter how many times you walk down a street, you can always see something new. Be it a person, a vehicle, a piece of graffiti, a strange colour combination, or a lost architectural style. The city is a massive collection of details, little inspirations that many people may miss as they walk down the high street on their phone.

    To create our designs a vast body of research is needed to inform what are essentially hand-drawings. There is something about drawing the designs by hand before digitally rendering them that adds a necessary human character.

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    An important element of your products is that they combine traditional and contemporary production methods. Could you tell us a little more about this?

    We describe ourselves partly as a contemporary souvenirs brand. We feel that giving our products a sense of place. where possible, makes them more meaningful, especially as personal mementos for yourself or loved one.

    As lovely and nostalgic as traditional methods are, it’s sometime impractical, so we have suppliers with the technology to produce our digital and lithographic prints, as well as the white ink printing for our ‘A5 London Notebooks’.

    Sylvia’s background and knowledge of printmaking means we still enjoy the rewarding side of making things ourselves. Every greetings card we make is individually hand-printed in house, the covers for our ‘Debossed Minibooks’ are hand-pressed with a mangle, and our notebooks are hand-sewn and trimmed.

    It’s a labour of love that we would love to do forever. As The City Works moves from city to city the level of quality and attention to detail in everything we do will always be a priority.

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    London, Vienna, Bethlehem…where’s next?

    There’s endless possibilities but we haven’t settled on one. It’s important to us that places we depict aren’t always mainstream tourist destinations. There are incredible parts of the world that maybe don’t get the attention they deserve, but maybe that’s they way it’s meant to be.

    Right now our focus is developing new ideas and expanding and establishing our ‘Lost in London’ and ‘Free in Vienna’ collections in their respective cities, while making ‘Bethlehem’ available for the busy Christmas period.

    We have been approached a couple of times about the possibility of Scottish cities, and with so much history, Scotland will be a place we study eventually. Bath is also a stunning place that we’ve been meaning to draw for a while. It’s a favourite of ours because it’s a world heritage site with an interesting colour palette. Just like any new collection, we want to try to take our time and do every city justice.

    When we feel our company has grown to a certain point, we’d like to open up the location of our future collections to our customers, and allow them to vote for a place that they wanted to see ‘cityworked’. After all, they live there.

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    All photos courtesy of The City Works.

  • LAW Magazine

    LAW Magazine

    LAW (Lives and Works) is an independent bi-annual magazine based in London. LAW is concerned with documenting the overlooked and portraying the beautiful everyday, giving people a sense of belonging and recognition. We visited LAW studios in Hackney and photographed Editor-in-Chief John Joseph Holt and Creative Director Joseph Prince in their working space.

    Photographs by Jack Johnstone.

    www.law-mag.com

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  • Halo Publications

    Halo Publications

    Founded by Corentine Jaunard and later joined by Lauriane Godart, Halo Publications is a collective of graphic designers based in Brussels.

    Since its beginnings in 2011, Halo Publications has developed projects based around a common interest in bookmaking and design. Halo Publication’s approach hasn’t changed and its founders still continue to work with artists, architects, academics, and anyone whose process allows them to reflect on the sensitivity of graphic forms. The finished product is the result of meetings and contemplations, deciding on factors such as paper choices, binding styles and layouts.

    Halo Publications also work on self-published personal projects such as as (Ch)A(ts)ccumalation and the collective’s own Tumblr. The members of Halo Publications emphasise on how these works are important for them as they allow them to work spontaneously with the common theme of transposing the content of the internet into book form.

    You can find more information about Halo Publications on the website below and on Facebook:

    www.halopublications.com

    Photos by Studio Blikk

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  • EOEL Print Giveaway

    EOEL Print Giveaway

    To celebrate the relaunch of Future Positive, we’ve teamed up with Earl of East London to give away a ‘Water The Plants’ A3 print. The print is lovingly made in London and is the first in the ‘Reminder Series’ – a range of tasteful reminders for the often forgotten. The illustrations are hand drawn and the prints are reproduced on a Riso digital duplicator.

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    Also, check out the post from our last visit to Netil market a few weeks ago, where we met Paul and Niko, the founders of EOEL. You can also catch up with them at Netil Market in East London every Saturday until Christmas.

    Use the form below to enter our giveaway. A random winner will be selected and notified in 30 days. Good luck!

    EOEL x Future Positive

  • So It Goes Magazine

    So It Goes Magazine

    So It Goes is a biannual arts and culture magazine that has been conceived to be a a meeting place for a global network of photographers, journalists and other creatives. It is also creative agency that extends the magazine’s network and commitment to unique storytelling into branded film content, documentaries, featurettes and short films. 

    The debut issue was launched just a few weeks ago and we talked to James Wright, co-editor and founder of So It Goes, about his background and the idea of starting a magazine/creative agency.

    www.soitgoescreative.com

    Could you tell us a little bit more about yourself and your background?

    I’m the Creative Director and Editor of So it Goes magazine. After having studied politics at Bristol University in the UK, I went on to work for the 2008 Barack Obama presidential campaign in (rural…) Virginia, followed by 2 years in the New York film industry working for Bob Berney. Needless to say, my career in publishing was something of a segue…

    After my visa expired, I came back to the UK and co-founded the lifestyle brand Fourth & Main. F&M was a brand comprising two parts: a capsule menswear collection and a biannual arts and culture publication called Fourth & Main Journal. The title profiled a range of young talent across the arts and ran as a free title for three issues. Earlier this year, we felt the magazine deserved to be given a life force of its own as a paid publication, hence the new company and the birth of So it Goes magazine…

    How did you meet your co-editors?

    I’ve known my co-editors Josh Bullock and Lewis Carpenter for 15 years; we were all at school together and rather fortuitously all found ourselves in similar fields at a time when we were all looking for a new creative adventure. I’d worked with Josh at F&M and knew that our shared interests (and work ethic!) would make an excellent foundation for the new company.

    How did you come up with the idea of So It Goes as a creative agency and a magazine?

    Both Josh and my first love is cinema. At Fourth & Main we made 18 short films together, ranging from a video for the Sundance Film Festival, a docu-short with artist Alex Prager and a fashion editorial with James Bond’s new ‘Q’, Ben Whishaw. With So it Goes magazine, we saw the opportunity to pursue our film work inan even more active sense. The magazine affords us wonderful access to an incredibly diverse range of stories and storytellers. We decided that one arm of the business should feed the other – a story we’re researching, or an actor we’re shooting can and should be complemented by video work that we workshop, produce, edit and disseminate ourselves.

    We also saw the creative agency as an outlet to talk with brands who are looking to diversify their advertising by developing an innovative and forward-thinking approach to content curation.

    To those ends, we hope to bridge our passion for filmmaking with commercial considerations.

    What differentiates So It Goes from other arts and culture magazines that have been launched in the last couple of years?

    So it Goes was born out of shared desire to launch an independent magazine title that was at once intelligent, but not alienating. We strongly believed there was a market that wasn’t being catered for. When we looked at the newsstand, we didn’t see many publications that balanced well-shot and well-produced photo shoots (of primarily acting or musical talent) with long-form cultural or political commentary. It seemed like there was a hinterland between the two. Many people have said that you have to hone in on a target demographic, whether it be food, travel, politics or fashion, but we believed there was a cross-cultural niche to be filled. As a result, we devised a chapterised format for the magazine – ‘The Actors’, ‘The Directors’ ‘The Musicians’, ‘The Artists’, ‘The Collection’, ‘The Places’ and ‘The Writers’. From the beginning, we were seeking to bring about a return to long-form journalism. Whatever the current predilection for throwaway, bite-size commentary, we still believed there was an appetite for well-written pieces that are given the word count to cut to the heart of an issue or story.

    As a result, there’s a truly broad and dynamic range of content from photo shoots with young acting talent like Felicity Jones; interviews with the auteur of modern Hollywood, Paul Thomas Anderson and the linchpin of cult British cinema Michael Winterbottom; an original piece of non-fiction from the actor James Franco; an augmented reality spread with artist/rapper Yung Jake; long-form articles that address the future of modern espionage and many many more.

    For finding recommendations of similar bands to the ones mentioned by James in the interview, don’t forget to check music discovery platform www.bandnext.com